ENSURING effective biosecurity is an important aspect of disease prevention, adopting good hygiene procedures can help to improve the biosecurity on your yard.

Use dedicated stable equipment for each horse to help avoid the spread of infections, for example individual feed buckets, brushes, tack etc.

Try to avoid horse-to-horse contact and shared water at shows or events and if you handle another horse wash your hands before handling your horse again. Disinfect stables and equipment, between horses, with disinfectants which are effective against viruses and bacteria.

Strangles Awareness Week May 2-8

Strangles Awareness Week is helping to raise awareness of the potentially fatal respiratory disease, strangles, by urging horse owners to take their equine’s temperature every day for a week.

Leading equine welfare charities, vets, researchers and higher education institutions from around the world have joined forces to organise the week, which is now in its third year.

Strangles is a highly contagious bacterial disease that causes swelling of the lymph nodes and abscesses, primarily in the head and neck. Horses can remain contagious for years if not treated effectively and do not gain immunity after contracting it.

The ‘Temperature Check Challenge’ (#TempCheckChallenge) asks owners to input a thermometer reading into a free online checker to help them get to know their horse’s normal range, something that fluctuates by a fraction of a degree through the day according to a range of factors.

Know your horse

By getting to know a horse’s normal temperature range, owners will be able to identify the need for veterinary intervention early, to help prevent strangles and other diseases involving an elevated temperature. People taking the challenge will also be entered into a free prize draw and contribute to a database of temperatures detailing what the normal healthy range is in horses.

Strangles is the most commonly diagnosed equine disease worldwide. Clinical signs include laboured breathing, difficulty eating, depression, high fever, thick nasal discharge and painful abscesses. In severe cases strangles can pose a risk to the horse’s life.

To take part in the #TempCheckChallenge during SAW 2022, follow the campaign on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @stranglesawarenessweek @StranglesWeek StranglesAwarenessWeek using hashtags #SAW2022 #SpeakOutOnStrangles

Link to online temperature checker: https://www.redwings.org.uk/strangles/horse-temperature-checker